P.L. asks from Browns Summit, NC on June 27, 2008
Feril Kittens
I have a wild Cat that just had a litter under my home. She's very timid and wont let you pet her or go near her. Her kittens were born premature (mama is small) and now learned how to walk and eat normal cat food. I thought it would be best to start handling the babies as much as possible to tame them so we can give them away. They are beautiful long haired kittens. Only they are getting really sick because they are LOADED with Fleas! I know they are too young to put powder,dip them or put collars on them. Does anyone know what I can do to get rid of the fleas so I can get rid of the kittens? I know the animal shelter will "put them down" if I gave them the kittens...
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P.H. answers from Memphis on July 09, 2008
Last year someone gave my daughter 2 kittens that were loaded with fleas so bad they were bleeding. I put a cap of clorox in the bucket of water and washed them in it every day for a week. The water was red with the blood the fleas had left behind on them. It worked great. So great that when I got them well someone stole both of the beautiful kittens from my home. I also got a cup of alcohol and some tweezers and picked the ones off each day that did not come off with the clorox bath and dropped them in the alcohol and it will kill them immediateley. Be careful not to get the clorox water in there eyes. These kittens were so sick from the fleas when we got them they could hardly walk. After about two days of TLC they were running around.
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S.J. answers from Memphis on June 30, 2008
Hey P.,
The only thing you can use on a kitten that young is the orginal Dawn Dish Detergent. It really works, I hope this helps. Thanks Sam
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K.H. answers from Chattanooga on June 29, 2008
hello P.. if you have been handling the kittens and they are not wild you may be able to bathe them. use ivory soap. it's a very mild soap and it will kill the fleas. most cats do not like water so you may have to wrap them in a towel while you bathe them. good luck!
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J.S. answers from Raleigh on June 28, 2008
If there are fleas on the kittens, there are many more fleas in their environment. You could treat the environment with DE (diatomaceous earth). You can probably find DE at a local feed store, or sometimes at a health food store like Whole Foods. Make sure it's food-grade DE (it should say this on the label). There is another grade used for pool filters, and this will not work and is also harmful. If you can't find food-grade DE locally, you can order it online.
Food-grade DE is totally nontoxic--people even give it to their livestock and pets in their food (for intestinal parasites, and as a mineral supplement). It's a dry powder that dries out any kind of bug or insect if they have enough contact with it.
It won't work instantly, but it will gradually kill off fleas, ticks or any other bug where you have sprinkled it. You can also sprinkle a little DE in the kittens' fur. It will make the fur a little dry and tangly, temporarily. Don't get DE in their faces; it can irritate the eyes, and breathing in the dust is a bit irritating, too. So apply it gently so you don't raise dust. You could rub a little into their bellies and along the back. The same goes for you; it can dry your skin a little, or irritate you eyes/lungs slightly, so when sprinkling it around, do it gently so as not to raise dust.
If you apply DE where they hang out under the porch, spread it as much of the area as you can. It doesn't have to be in a thick layer--just a little is fine, like a sprinkling of snow. There are about 100 times more fleas off the animals than on them, so treating the area helps a lot.
You can also flea-comb the kittens. Feed stores and pet stores sell flea combs. It takes a lot of time, though--you need to go over the kittens pretty thoroughly. Some longhaired coats are hard to comb through, and if you put DE in their fur, the tangles might make it impossible to comb them. But if you can, take each kitten and comb, and check after each pass through the fur. If there is a flea on the comb, dump it into a pan of water with a little soap or detergent in it--the flea will drown right away. Keep the bowl or pan next to the kitten. Keep combing till you don't get fleas. This needs to be done on each kitten, every day.
Another way to treat the kittens is to bathe them. Any mild, plain soap will kill fleas on the kittens, if you leave the suds on for five or ten minutes. Not easy with a squirming kitten! But you can use very mild soap--anything gentle made for babies. You don't need to use a lot of it, either. When you wet down the kitten, wet the head and neck first. Soap up the neck and the back of the head, avoiding the face. That way, when fleas run for higher ground, they won't be able to avoid drowning by getting up on the cat's face. Then wet and soap the rest of the kitten, and you can keep rubbing in the suds for five minutes or so, or just hold the kitten. Make sure you soap the belly area. The fleas on the kitten should be drowned in five minutes or so.
I like to use Dr. Bronner's liquid soap for babies--it's unscented and gentle. Another plain castile soap would be good, too. Try to avoid perfumes and definitely don't use anything with strong essential oils in it--those oils can be very toxic to cats (like tea tree oil, eucalpytus, lavender, etc.). There are pet shampoos with these oils in them, and some of them are labeled as flea shampoos. Essential oils can kill cats so use something plain very plain. You could a simple bar soap that has no perfume.
You don't have to use anything strong like Dawn, or something with citrus in it. Some of the citrus shampoos have d-limonene in them, which is made from citrus peel. It will kill fleas, but can be very toxic to cats. Stick with something gentle and unperfumed.
There may be rescue groups in your area that can help you with the kittens, and neuter the feral cat. They may be able to do that, give her shots, and then release her again to your yard, or find another home for her if that's what you want. You can check at Petfinder.com--they have lists of local rescue groups you can contact.
People have suggested calling Animal Control or your local shelter, but you are wise not to in some areas. The suggestions are right about some shelters, but not about all of them. Many shelters will euthanize almost all animals, and some don't give any health care or neuter, and don't find homes. It all depends on their capacity. Check Petfinder.com for local rescue groups first. They may be able to help you, and rescue groups usually don't euthanize.
Thank you for taking care of these babies!
J.
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B.D. answers from Greensboro on June 28, 2008
I am not sure what to do about the fleas but as far as adopting them out I have experience.
I live in an area where it is very difficult to adopt any animal and the shelters are pretty full of drop offs.
I adopted a stray kitty who was pregnant and after she had her kittens I advertised "Free Kittens" - I received NO calls. I then switched to "Pure Breed Barn Cats, $10.00 each" and sold every single one of them within a week.
I found it odd that a bit of creative advertising worked. I also knew that since families were "paying" for the kittens that they really wanted them and would love them dearly.
One note: I photo'd each kitten in a cute place (flower bed, on a fence post, next to my sunflowers) and put a name with each one of them. When someone called I told them I would email the pictures first and if interested they could stop by and take a look. I do believe if I had 30 kittens I could have adopted them all out this way.
Good luck and be creative when adopting them out - you would be surprised how well it works.
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K.R. answers from Charlotte on June 29, 2008
i used to working at a grooming facility and used to get this question all the time. let me tell you what we used... lemon joy dish soap. i know it sounds crazy but just give them a bath, soap them up with lemon joy dish soap (careful not to get it in there eyes) and let it sit for about 5 minutes. you will probably have to repeat the process several times depending on how "loaded" they are with fleas.personally i have done the wash, rinse and REPEAT many times before clearing off the all fleas. it has to be the lemon joydish soap something in the lemon kills off the fleas and it also helps to have a flea comb to comb them out while the soap is sitting on them. also don't be alarmed if the water looks red or brown when you rinse them off just keep soaping, letting it set and rinsing till you get clear water and eventually no more fleas. once you have them cleaned and dryed take a q-tip with a little rubbing alcohol on it and clean out there ears the fleas love to hide in there ears while you bathe them. hope this helps.
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S.S. answers from Lexington on June 27, 2008
most shelters only put animals down as a last result. i would call them to come out and collect them, get them all cleaned up and immunized. then you can have them put up for adoption, but tell the shelter that if they have been there so long they will be put down, have them returned to you.
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L.S. answers from Nashville on June 28, 2008
There is a pill you can give even small kittens that will kill the fleas in 30 minutes. However, it has to be given by a vet. They know how to get it in their throats. I found an abandoned kitten, very tiny, and that is what they did. Also, if you are wanting to give them away, you must have them dewormed. Somehow you will need to get the kittens away when mama isn't around if you plan to be successful at this. But it is expensive to get this all done. Instead of calling animal control, try the Humane Society or a similar organization. As much as you would like to save them, if you cannot afford all the costs of getting them healthy enough to give away, a local animal shelter may be your only recourse.
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S.B. answers from Louisville on June 27, 2008
i was told dawn dish soap to bath them in..i have a kitten that was born arpil 10th and i have done thing to her and it works...plus the vet gave me some special shampoo to use also.we have 5 older cats and then a kitten so a total of 6 cats!
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B.P. answers from Jacksonville on June 28, 2008
you can get advantage or frontline at your local vet's that is designed for kittens. also, you can use a flea comb on them; which is tedious but works.
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B.M. answers from Johnson City on June 27, 2008
How old are the kittens? If they eat cat food, start placing brewers yeast on the food, this absorbs into the blood stream and makes them untastey to fleas. And if they are old enough that they are weaned, remove them from under the house and place them in a room in your home after giving them all a thourough washing and continue the brewers yeast on the food. It should keep the fleas away. And I would bomb under the house to get rid of those as well.
I would also take them to a vet to get checked, and ask them if they have something like a trap to help you capture the female cat and get her spayed to ensure no more kittens :). Good luck in finding homes for these ones, if you lived near me I would take one ;D My husband would probably kill me though, as we have 6 already lol.
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